E-commerce at Newark InOne DePaul University

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E-commerce at Newark InOne DePaul University

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E-commerce at Newark InOne DePaul University Tony Chien, Former Vice President and General Manager E-commerce Property of Newark Electronics – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: E-commerce at Newark InOne DePaul University


1
E-commerce at Newark InOneDePaul University
  • Tony Chien, Former Vice President and General
    Manager E-commerce
  • Property of Newark Electronics

2
Newark InOne Profile
  • Largest small order electronic component
    distributor in North America
  • Focus B2B
  • Founded 1932
  • Headquarters Chicago, IL
  • Employees 1,500 plus
  • FY2003 Sales - 430 Million
  • 8,000 orders/day
  • 48 branches
  • 125 field sales people
  • 2 call centers
  • Website and e-procurement channels
  • Division of Premier Farnell, Inc.
  • Sales - 1.3 Billion 6,000 employees,
    distribution in 24 countries worldwide

3
Who are our customers and what do they buy
  • Customers
  • Design engineers Purchasing based on product
    attributes
  • Purchasing Purchasing based on part s and
    price
  • MRO Purchasing based on part s, replaces and
    availability
  • Product
  • One stop shopping with giant assortment
  • 150,000 stocked skus from 400 manufacturers
  • Capacitors, connectors, enclosures, power
    supplies, etc.
  • Service
  • 95 ship same day (overnight)
  • Kitting
  • Reserved inventory (scheduled orders)
  • Sourcing of non catalog items from 1 million sku
    database

4
Electronics b2b Landscape
  • OEMs (Intel, AMP, AVX, etc)
  • Only sell direct to major manufacturers like DELL
  • Production orders scheduled 3 months ahead
  • Websites focused on technical content for
    engineers
  • Primarily EDI and XML integration
  • Distributors (Newark Electronics, etc.)
  • Handle smaller non product orders for OEMS
  • Carry inventory for same day shipment
  • High service and price
  • Robust sell side websites
  • Electronic component portals (PartMiner, USbid
    etc.)
  • Launched in dot.com bubble
  • Spent millions on promotion and content
  • Do not carry inventory functioned more as
    broker
  • Struggling for viable business model (abandoned
    transaction fees. moving to value added services
    and subscription fees)

5
E-commerce is important to Newark and our
customers
  • Consultants forecast that 30 of electronics
    sales will done over the Internet
  • Internet one of favorite channels for high tech
    electronic corporations and engineers.
  • Electronics is very good fit for internet sales.
  • Product is commodity
  • No difference between Pentium chip from Newark or
    a competitor
  • Product is high value and low weight so easy to
    ship

6
Order processes are changing
  • Old
  • Locate product in 2000 page catalog
  • Call up sales rep at local branch to order
  • Sales rep is source for more information from
    main frame

7
New Order Processes
  • New
  • Self service Customers locate correct product
    on website or e-catalog
  • Order electronically (website, XML, e-mail, ARIBA
    network, EDI)
  • No human interaction with Newark
  • All information must be available electronically
    and easy to use

8
E-Commerce channel supports the Newark strategy
of surrounding the account and delighting the
individual
  • Surround the account and delight corporate
  • Support customer e-procurement systems like ARIBA
    and Commerce One which reduce their purchasing
    costs.
  • Delight the individual
  • New services on website Newark.com like
    parametric search and datasheets that make their
    life easier.

9
Newark.com website delights the individual with
new capabilities not found in other channels
  • Extremely effective website search tools allow
    quick searches of 150,000 catalog skus in
    seconds
  • Parametric search
  • Free text search
  • Part search
  • Easy product comparison
  • Higher level of technical product data
  • Images, product attributes, data sheets
  • Powerful customer service capabilities
  • Order history
  • Order status
  • Order confirmation e-mails
  • Order ship notice with tracking e-mails
  • 7/24 availability

10
Newark surrounds the account and delights
corporate by supporting E-procurement
  • Newark Fortune 1000 customers are making
    multi-million dollar investments in procurement
    systems like ARIBA and Commerce One expecting to
    save tens of millions by
  • Lower their purchasing costs through automation
  • Improve their reporting
  • Eliminate off contract purchasing
  • Newark supports all major e-procurement systems
  • We are industry technology leader and support
    custom E-catalogs, accept XML orders, and
    punchout.
  • Many of our competitors are too small to support
    E-procurement systems.

11
Newark Electronics Industry Leader in
E-procurement
  • 130 live E-procurement partnerships
  • Support all major platforms Ariba, Commerce One,
    SAP, Requisite, Oracle, TPN, PeopleSoft, and I2
  • ARIBA
  • Certified Ariba Ready program
  • Support CIF and PunchOut catalogs
  • CXML transactions
  • Commerce One
  • Certified Commerce One affiliate and enabled
    supplier on Commerce One.net market site
  • Roundtrip Certified
  • XCBL transactions
  • E-marketplace partnerships
  • Exostar, Pantellos, Covisint, and Market Mile

12
E-procurement continues to grow at rapid rate
Newark live E-procurement partnerships are
growing fast
130 Live
Commerce One and ARIBA are most popular
93 Live
Commerce One
Ariba
30 Live
Other
Oracle
SAP
10 Live
1999
2000
2001
2002
13
Customers need significant Newark support for
E-procurement
  • Expertise
  • Veteran e-procurement project managers for
    e-catalog creation, pricing, testing,
    documentation, rollout and ramp up. Guide
    customers.
  • E-Catalogs (product data)
  • More than 20 different major formats plus
    hundreds of customer specific formats
  • Good product descriptions, commodity code
    classifications, and contract pricing
  • Static and dynamic catalogs (punchout/roundtrip)
  • Transaction capability (transaction data)
  • XML, EDI, e-mail, web retrieval
  • Customer specific order processes must be
    automated procurement cards, special handling,
    multiple ship to addresses, tax status, etc.
  • Fast turn-around
  • E-catalog creation and updates, transaction
    testing, customers specific processes

14
Two ways to get E-procurement catalog information
to customers
  • E-catalogs hosted on customer internal
    procurement systems updated quarterly
  • Newark part
  • Manufacturer part
  • Short product description
  • Contract price
  • Punch-out catalogs updated nightly or hourly
  • User comes to private Newark website to search
    product and bring order back to their procurement
    system
  • Allows more powerful searches like search by
    attribute
  • Show richer product data
  • Show inventory or lead times

15
ARIBA e-procurement customers browse and order
products in two different ways
Newark product search and shopping cart via 3rd
party (Actiant)
Dell product search and shopping cart on
Dell.com

Newark catalog file hosted by customer
Grainger catalog file hosted by customer
Dell catalog file hosted by customer
XML product search
XML order
XML product search
XML order

Customer ARIBA system (including product search
and shopping cart)
Customer ARIBA system
Dynamic Punchout catalogs hosted by suppliers
Static E-catalogs sent by suppliers
16
Data Requirements for E-procurement catalogs
  • Search
  • Newark or manufacturer part numbers
  • Part search
  • Short descriptions
  • Free text search
  • Product classification codes (taxonomies) to
    search by drill down by product category
  • UNSPSC, RUS, customer specific
  • Started by hand coding, now tools
  • File Formats vary platform and customer
    preference
  • ARIBA, Commerce One, Oracle, ...
  • CIF, tab delimited, comma delimited, flat file
  • Contract pricing
  • Custom catalogs - Only list some items or
    commodity classes

17
E-procurement systems Punchout
  • Offers data not available in E-catalogs
  • Images
  • Technical attributes
  • Inventory / lead times
  • Datasheets
  • Columnar contract pricing
  • Substitutes
  • Complementary products
  • Links to manufacturer websites
  • Moves burden of managing catalog content to
    suppliers
  • Millions of skus
  • Quarterly updates

18
Customers ever increasing needs in eProcurement
  • Portals
  • mini catalogues
  • static catalogues
  • UNSPSC
  • Part
  • Single column price
  • Word descriptions
  • Full catalogue 100K
  • Simple punch-out
  • Static inventory
  • 100 descriptions
  • XML Orders
  • XML Confirmation
  • Punch-out columnar pricing
  • Punch-out for SAP, Oracle and bespoke
  • Punch-out - parametric search
  • XML Invoice
  • XML Ship notice
  • XML Scheduled orders
  • Smart logic out of stock
  • VMI
  • Web Services

2002
2001
2000
2003
19
E-procurement competition
20
Rapid deployment of new technical capability
critical to maintain our lead in E-procurement in
FY04
  • Exostar integration XCBL 3.0 (B)
  • Customer load utility for in house punchout (N)
  • Expand capacity and improve robustness of
    e-procurement backbone (B)
  • Daily product loads, price updates and hourly
    inventory load for in-house punchout (N)
  • New ARIBA XML messages plus upgrade to CXML 1.2
    (B)
  • In house ARIBA punchout (F)
  • In house punchout for SAP and Commerce One
    customers (B)
  • Integrate with XML 27 more customers (B)
  • 4 new XCBL messages (B)
  • In house punchout for Oracle customers (B)
  • Parametric search for in-house punchout customers
    (B)
  • Web services integration for customers (B)

Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4
21
Newark Technical Challenge Integration of
customer facing front end systems with back end
Back End ERP systems
Customer facing E-commerce systems
Integration Layer
Newark.com (Java)
BPCS/AS400
E-procurement ARIBA, Commerce One (XML)
?
CD-ROM Catalog (Java)
I-tracker Stockrooms (Java)
22
Search for Integration Solution
  • Business Requirements
  • Automate the process from end to end no human
    intervention
  • Receive Orders and send confirmation
    electronically
  • Support Price Check and Inventory availability
  • Support Order Status
  • Scalable and easily maintainable process
  • Cost efficient
  • Technical Requirements
  • Availability of up to date data, anywhere
    anytime
  • Can accept and translate various XML formats
    (XCBL, CXML, etc)
  • Reduce implementation and deployment time

23
3 Major E-procurement Business Needs
1. Punchout or Roundtrip Website
E-procurement Buyers ARIBA C1
Newark
XML Form xCBL,cXML
Separate website
Catalog Delivery
E-Catalog Request
E-Catalog Delivery
2. E-catalogs
XML Order Submit
XML Order Confirmation
XML Price Availability
3. XML Transactions
24
IONAs Orbix E2A Originally Purchased to Allow
XML Transactions from Multiple Platforms
  • Ariba - CXML 1.3 messages
  • Purchase Order Request
  • Purchase Order Response
  • Server Availability Request
  • Commerce One - XCBL 2.0 with MQC messages
  • Server Availability Request
  • Purchase Order Request
  • Purchase Order Response
  • Order Status
  • Price Check
  • Availability Check

Single Set of Newark E-proc. XML Messages
25
Newark E-procurement Architecture to support XML
E-procurement Messages
Auto-order Order edit tool
Newark E-proc database
Newark E-procurement Harness
MQ Series
BPCS
26
Hardware Software Newark E-procurement
Architecture
Backend AS400
Sun E450 2 GB Ram 4 CPU 400 MHZ 50 GB HD
SunE250 1 GB Ram 2 CPU 400 MHZ 100 GB HD
Ariba C1 XML messages
Iona Message Processor (Java), MQ Series
Sun Solaris 2.7 IONA Orbix E2A Oracle MQ Series
Sun E450 2 GB Ram 4 CPU 400 MHZ 50 GB HD
Oracle
27
Customer product search preferences changing
  • Punchout replacing static e-catalogs
  • More up to date information (updated daily
    instead of annually
  • Supports columnar pricing (volume discount)
  • Can view inventory
  • Access to more powerful non ARIBA or C1 product
    search tools
  • Parametric search
  • Shift data management / load work to suppliers
  • Requires integration testing with each new
    customer
  • 40 today

28
Customer moving away from stand alone
e-procurement solutions back to their ERP systems
  • Most popular systems
  • 2000
  • ARIBA, Commerce One, Intellisys etc.
  • 2003
  • SAP, Oracle, I2, etc.
  • Most ERP packages now come standard with built in
    e-procurement functionality

29
Common XML language and data taxonomies starting
to splinter
  • XML
  • Consensus is either CXML or XCBL
  • Problem is people are not staying current
  • Many customers still on 2 or 3 version back from
    latest due to cost
  • Suppliers required to support all versions
  • Documentation has been poor from some vendors
  • Inadvertent creation of new versions at every
    customer
  • Data
  • Still many different product taxonomies
  • UNSPC, RUS, etc.
  • Same problem - customers not staying current due
    to cost

30
XML integration difficult for some vendors
  • ARIBA - integrate to network and you are
    integrated to all ARIBA customers
  • Commerce One - must integrate with each Commerce
    One customer separately
  • Portals - similar but not identical XML protocols
    to ARIBA or Commerce One
  • Exostar, Covisint, Pantellos
  • Starting to become more like EDI - where every
    customer must be mapped individually
  • Primary advantage - still fairly few messages,
    cost to support not too high

31
Many e-procurement vendors and portals closing
down - stranding customers
  • Intellisys
  • Ford, Texas Instruments
  • Purchase Pro
  • Hotel industry
  • TotalMRO
  • MRO.com
  • ARIBA sales are down 50 and still losing money
  • Commerce One losing money and just sold
    transaction network to E-scout

32
E-procurement demands stretching other parts of
company
  • Back end ERP responses needs to be real time with
    customer systems waiting for answers
  • No more batch processing
  • Product data must be 100 accurate
  • Electronic catalogs make pricing errors obvious
  • Easy to filter out and reject skus with bad
    descriptions
  • Customer want 7/24 support and no down time
  • Customers pushing users to 100 purchases through
    e-procurement systems. Dont want any excuses not
    to use.
  • Sales staff must be literate and able to answer
    questions on how to find product and order on
    customer e-procurement systems
  • Newark trains its staff on ARIBA and Commerce One

33
Customer focus on getting ROI on E-procurement
systems is changing
  • 2000 Theory
  • increased productivity of purchasing staff
  • Expected to save hundreds of millions for several
    million dollar investment
  • 2000 Actual
  • Supplier enablement and user training huge issues
  • Did not get volume through system
  • 2003 Expectations
  • Cost savings from eliminating off contract
    purchases
  • Improved reporting allows detection of areas of
    spend to cut
  • Volume gradually coming through system
  • Does help in vendor rationalizations

34
Supplier leaders in E-procurement
  • Newark Electronics
  • Grainger
  • Boise Cascade Office products
  • MSC Industrial
  • Staples
  • Software Spectrum
  • Dell Computer

35
Portals no longer play major role in North America
  • All supplier run industry portals were bust
  • Customer benefit on stop shopping was not strong
  • Even customer run industry portals are struggling
  • Economics are not clear
  • Does Covisint buy better than GM
  • Heavy infrastructure costs
  • Portals still being invested in in Europe and
    Asia
  • What do they know that USA doesnt?
  • Original purpose of cashing in on IPO is dead

36
Good News
  • XML Integration with customers is finally
    happening without massive pain
  • No longer require months of technical effort
  • Customers are starting to put significant volume
    through their systems - best ones approaching 50
  • Cost savings for Newark by eliminating manual
    order entry and customer service
  • Newark is winner from e-procurement,
  • Surviving vendor rationalization, going from 1 of
    8 to 1 of 2
  • Strong e-procurement program winning awards and
    praise from customers
  • Government and international customers starting
    to adopt e-procurement
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